Archive/Atmospheric Exposures and Cardiovascular Mortality in United States Counties: Formaldehyde and Wet-Bulb Temperature as Leading Predictors
Atmospheric Exposures and Cardiovascular Mortality in United States Counties: Formaldehyde and Wet-Bulb Temperature as Leading Predictors
Samyak Shrestha, David J. Lary, Shisir Ruwali et al.
7. Juli 2026
en

Abstract

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of mortality in the United States, yet the role of atmospheric exposures as independent predictors of county-level CVD mortality remains poorly characterized. We integrated satellite-derived atmospheric data alongside socioeconomic, demographic, and livestock predictors across 24,487 county-year observations in the contiguous United States (2012–2019) and applied an XGBoost model with SHAP-based interpretability to identify the leading predictors of county-level CVD mortality (Test R2 = 0.706, RMSE = 29.55 per 100,000 persons). Four of the top ten predictors came from CAMS/ERA5. Ambient formaldehyde exposure frequency ranked second among all 43 predictors, exceeded only by educational attainment and surpassing poverty rate. Wet-bulb temperature ranked third, Leaf Area Index for High Vegetation ranked seventh, and sulphate aerosol mixing ratio ranked eighth. These variables added county-level prediction information beyond socioeconomic covariates. Integrating atmospheric exposure monitoring into county-level CVD surveillance alongside socioeconomic indicators may improve the identification of high-risk geographies.

IPC Classification

G06

Keywords

atmosphericexposurescardiovascularmortalityunitedstatescountiesformaldehydewet-bulbtemperatureleadingpredictorssensorsdiseasecauseroleindependentcounty-levelremainspoorlycharacterizedintegratedsatellite-deriveddata
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